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TTEARRT'S SEND AY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, OA, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER SO, 1013.
[ UUIUIH
SELECTS CHEAT
Springs Surprise by Putting Har
iris, Auburn Fullback, on the
Second Team.
CHARLEY BRICKLEY, OF HARVARD, AND A DIAGRAM OF HIS GREAT KICKING FEATS
/
Brickley clearly earned the title of “King of Goalkickers” when he kicked the five field goals against Yale. He showed his versatility by making one of them a place kick and the other four drop kicks.
In the first period he drop-kicked a goal from the 25-yard line. In the second quarter a place kick traveled from the 25-yard line. Two drop kicks in the third period from the 35 and 32-yard lines and
another from the 15-yard line in the closing chapter settled Yale’s fate. The diagram shows the kicking methods of Brickley and the distances from and the order in which his goals were kicked.
By Mike Donahue.
Auburn Football Team.)
FIRST TEAM.
Flayer. Position. College.
Pitts Center Auburn
Thigpen ... Left Guard ... Auburn
Lookwood . ..Right Guard . Auburn !
Scbiletter . Right Tackle... Clemson
Dutton Left Tackle. .... L. S. U.
Robinson ... Right End Auburn
E. Brown .. Left End.. Vanderbilt
Paddock.. . Quarterback Georgia
New«H .Left Halfback. . . Auburn ,
McWhorter Riabt Halfback Georgia'
Sikes Pullback. Vanderbilt
SECOND TEAM.
Player. Position. College
Putnum Center ... Vanderbilt
Malone. . . Left Guard Georgia
Klock Right Gu^rd L. S. U.
Easlinger . Right Tackle . . . . Auburn
Loidsell Left Tackle Auburn
Conklin Right End Georgia
Kearley Left End .. Auburn
Boer.sch.... Quarterbaok ..Vanderbilt;
Cook Left Halfback Tech
Vandergruff Right Halfbaok Alabama
Harris .......Fullback.. Auburn
T HB picking of an AH-^outhorn
team la alwnyn a ,1ob that mu at !
Jiecras&rlly he more or Jeps
guesswork, a a it Is practically im
possible for anyone to see every team
In even one rame, Rven this would
not be much help, because a player
should be selected for hla work
throughout the whole season rather
than for his work in any one partic
ular frame. At least, that is the way
the writer is going 4 to look at it, and
certain players that might otherwise
be eligible are not to be considered
because of their absence from the
game during very critical times dur
ing the season.
Very prominent among thes are
Brown and Morgan, of Vanderbilt,
very good men and very probably
All-Southern player®, but as far as
their value to Vanderbilt from an
S. I A A. standpoint i* ooncerned.
they might Just as well have not been
•n college. Another man te Taylor,
of Auburn, who was the moat im
portant man In Auburn's defense sys
tem and very imi>ortant In the of
fense aa wfcll. Taylor was no help
in the last three games because of
injuries and can not be considered,
ill
I T 1a then with all these misgivings
that T undertake the task of ex
pressing one among many opinions
of what an All-Southern ream should
be composed of. I am going to bunch
the three center men becai* a the
Auburn center trio lndh Id
collectively outplayed everything
they w ent against this year.
Pitts at center was easily the best
of the year; an accurate passer, a
hard chargor on the offense, and u
terror to opponents on the defense.
He knew 7 how to use his hands on
breaking through and his eyes were
always wide open.
Thigpen was the best guard of the
Hear, shifty, aggresive, with plenty of
r weight, he is All-Southern by a big
margin. He was perhaps the most
consistent player in the Auburn line,
snd Just the kind of steady playel
that a good guard ought to be.
Lockwood at the other was ham
pered a good deal bv injuries, but he
played In nearly all the Important
games, and was always prominent by
his work. Not as shifty a* Thigpen,
lie was still impervious to Any as
sault around his territory, and occa
sionally surprised opponents by
breaking through and nailing the
runner for a loss The average of
the year on centers was not up to the
usual S. 1. A. A. standard.
• • •
T HERE are more candidates for the
tackle positions There were a
good many fair tackles, but no really
great ones, except, perhaps. Brown,
of Vanderbilt, who is omitted for rea
sons already mentioned If Louisell,
of Auburn, had not been hampered by
injuries most of the year. 1 would
choose him, and if I had to pick a
combination at the end of the sea
son to play any other combination I
would take him for tackle. His kick
ing is also a very important factor.
He was out a good (leal of the time,
however.
Perhaps the best and most consis
tent tackle of the year was Schiletter,
of Clemson. He is heavy, aggressive
and a hard man to handle He has
held his own and has mostly outplay
ed every man he has been against
this season.
For the other tackle I will pick a
player who, while he has not played
that position, showed every indication
that he could play it and play' it well.
Dutton, of L. S. V . played a roving
center against Auburn. sometimes
coming through at guard, sometimes
at tackle, but always boring in and
tearing things up. He gave Auburn
more trouble than any linesman this
year. Esslinger. of Auburn. w*as a
good steady player in this position, as
also was Turner, of Georgia.
w * *
TT >BTNSON, at right end for Auburn,
was the best end of the year,
and i twas nearly impossible to get
him out of the way
Enoch Brown, of Vanderbilt, was
also good, but not as good as last
year. The cares of being captain and
the trying to help out a weak line
interfered with the effectiveness of his
work.
Kearley, of Auburn, is a good end
that was spoiled by being shifted to
the baokfleld in an effort to add
weight to that department. He work
ed well in the backdeld. and in the
Georgia game played as good a game
at end as anyone of the year. Con
klin, of Georgia, was another good
consistent player
• • •
N the backfleld there is no trouble
i about the halfback positions as
Newell am! McWhorter stood head
and shoulders above everyone else,
though I did not think that McWhor
ter was quite as good as he was last
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Famous Tech Coach Selects Eleven for The Sunday American
HEISMAN HAS CRACK IDI3 ALL-SOUTHERN TEAM
By J. W. Heisman.
(Coach Tech Football Eleven.)
■ N attempting a selection of the
I best players In their respective
positions for an All-Southern In
tercollegiate Athletic Asociation team
for 1913 it seems well to explain again
to the reading public J,hat this asso
ciation does not include every college
that happens to be located in the
South, which is the reason that no
players are mentioned who are play
ing on teams in Virginia and North
Carolina, and but very few in South
Carolina.
A couple of association colleges are
to be found in Texas and Kentucky,
but these are so very far away from
this section that a consideration of
their players would he of no interest
to the people of this vicinity, and
our consideration of them prolmbfv
would be equally uninteresting even
to those colleges. Hence they are
omitted.
I look for a closer agreement among
writers who will attempt a selection
this y r ear than is usually the case.
There are as many players as ever,
but fewer of them stand out with
prominence from among the rest than
Is customary.
ttinued on Next Page, Column 3.
REM EDY.-3R MEN
AT DRUGC518T8.GH TRIA : BOX BY MAIL 60a
fF.OM PLAHTLN <?3 F’Et.Pa L>". BROOKLYN.NY.
c > m n at ions-
Dutton For Center.
H AD Morgan, of Vanderbilt, been
able to play throughout the sea
son; it is hard to say whether any
body else would have been able to
beat him out for the position of cen
ter of not.
But we are not called upon to decide
that question, for the fads of the
matter are that Morgan was not in
the big games of the year, so how can
he be considered as a candidate for
All-Southern honors? It is true that
it w r aa a mere misfortune that kept
him out of those g&mw. in* so would
It be if he had been taken with ty
phoid fever, or had had a leg cut off
by a circular saw wouldn’t he have
been lost to an All-S. I. A. A team
Just as surely as to the Vanderbilt
team? No doubt he played well in
the early season easy games, but how
can a man be considered in this con
nection unless he gets in the impor
tant games later on as well? Pint*
player thought I consider him. I feel
that his misfortune must not be the
misfortune of the All-S. I. A. A. team,
and hence 1 can not see my way to
put on it a man who is too crippled
to play.
This brings it down to Pitts, of Au
burn. and Dutton, of L. S U.
Never heard of Dutton?
That’s because you don't keep up
with football all over the circuit. He
to one of the very greatest linesmen
in the association, and even Auburn
hates to say whether Pitts is a bet
ter man than he or not. Both lads
are wonderfully aggressive on the de
fense, both have the ideal weight,
with just loads of experience to back
it up, and both know how to tackle,
to block and to open holes.
I am forced to rive Dutton the call.
He is a mighty strappir fellow,
weighing 19t> pounds stripped tine!
stands 6 feet 3 inches. In the last
two years he has played the entile
time in every game. Never once has
time been taken out for him. Th's
shows that he has splendid endurance
He is an accurate passer and fast as
greased lightning He Is captain of
the L S. r track team, holding at
present the S. 1. A A. records for th*
shot and discus. He is an exceeding
ly clean liver, having absolutely no
bad habits, and is always in tip top
condition.
Pitts is almost ns good. To tell the
truth, 1 shifted these fellows bar*
and forth at least BO times before I
finally selected Dutton. Pitts is a
very fast man in getting about the
field of play, and a most accurate
snapper.
Loeb. of Tech, is still the player of
grit par excellence, but no man with
as low weight as 153 pounds can be
given this olace
Riddell, of Alabama, is a very re
liable center rush, and deserves hon
orable mention
Barnwell, of Sewanee, has done re
markably well for a first-year man.
• • •
Picks Auburn Guards.
T HERE can be very little doubt
about the guard positions tbs
year. Nearly all the teams have new'
guards, and il etonua to reason that
Heisman’s All-Southern Team
PLAYER.
Dutton
Lockwood ....
Thigpen
T. Brown
Schilletter
E. Brown
Robinson
Paddock
Sikes
McWhorter ..,
Harris
POSITION.
. ... Center ....
. . Right Guard .
. . Left Guard .
. . Right Tackle
. . Left Tackle .
. . . Bight End . .
.... Left End ..
.. Quarterback
Right Halfback
. Left Halfback
.... Fullback . ..
COLLEGE.
L. S. U.
Auburn
Auburn
Vanderbilt
Clemspn
Vanderbilt
Auburn
Georgia
Vanderbilt
Georgia
Auburn
few of these can stand any chance at
an All-Southern berth- *
Auburn's superiority to other teams
this season lay in her line, and she is
naturally bound to have more of her
linemen picked for plac- t on th a
team than any other college. Au
burn’s tackles are both new and wo
do not pnd them overshadowing th*
field particularly, but neither of her
guards is new.
Thee two men—Thigpen and Lock-
wood—along with the great Pitts have
been able to open up with ease every
center bunch they have faced this
year. Both men are very heavy and
powerful, and both are thorough
musters of the position Of course,
Lockwood Is too slow a man to make
an Interfering guard, but the way he
crowds his bulk through an oppos
ing line and dams up the opposition
<f>lay before it ever gets up to the lino
more than‘makes up for what he
lacks in this one department of offen
sive play.
Klock, of L S. U., Is an extra good
guard and comes nearest to a posi
tion.
Malone, of Georgia, Is an aggres
sive, fast and experienced player, but
he is too light to hold his own with
the two i have selected, and as ho !a
some half dozen pounds heavier than
Means, of Tech, what 1 say for him
must go for the Litter also. Means,
however, has finished out a most
creditable four years of college foot
ball. He knows the guard position
thoroughly, and his limitations n
playing the game are those tht per
tain to physique only.
Hicks, of Alabama, is coming along
fast and will mane a geal capable
guard in another year.
Captain McOallum, of Sewanee. has
played a strong game at guard the
entire season, and would be my first
choice for sub-guard on our team.
* * •
Hard to Pick Tackles.
O NE of the hardest problems in
this task is the selection of the
tackles, and that not because there
are so many good ones to choose
from, but because there are so few.
Without a doubt the very best
tackle playing in the South to-day
is Tom Brown, of Vanderbilt. The
only doubt abqut Brown’s right to a
place Is the fact that, like Morgan,
lie has been out of the game for a
large part of the season on account
of injuries. Still the only S 1 A. A.
game that he missed playing was
that with Auburn Had he been un
able to get in the Thanksgiving Da\
game I should have had to cut him
from consideration as 1 did Morgan.
But his work .against Sewanee dem
onstrated not only that lie was phys
ically sound again, but that he was
still the great player of former days.
Playing up to his best former form
there is no good excuse for keeping
him off the team, especially as there
are so few good tackles anyway; and
I. therefore, make no apologies for
assigning him a berth. He Hrs exert -
thing that goes to make an extra
fine tackle.
When it comes to selecting
Brown’s partner on the other side of
the line we are confronted by much
the most difficult guess in the whole
lot. The most prominent of the re
maining tackles hut© been Hayly arui
Kglly, of Tennessee; Dobbins, of Se-
wanee, Woodward, of Tulane; TuY*-
ner. of Georgia, and Schilletter, of
Clemson.
Preas of Tech, was much the most
promising new man of the year, but
inasmuch as he has been ruled out
it is impossible to discuss him here.
Hayly and Kelly are very fair men,
but I consider them a shade too light.
Woodward is not to be despised, and
Kelly has done some very good work.
Between them and Schilletter it is
almost a toss-up. I prefer the last
named because of his three years of
experience, and his ability to run
with the ball. He is a 190-pound
man and fast on his feet for his size.
Take him altogether* and he makes a
very dependable tackle.
Forester, of Mercer, has played a
jam-up game all year.
Selects Ends Easily.
I N Smith. Logan and Conklin, Geor
gia has three rattling good
ends. Tech has a promising man in
Cushman, which same may easily be
said for Taylor, of Auburn albeit
both these men need more experience
at the position. Carroll, of Tennes
see, is a good end. And here—out
side of my best two bets—1 find I
have already come to the end of my
string.
I have little or no hesitation in
saying that E. Brown, of Vanderbilt,
and Robinson, of Auburn, are the two
best ends of the season.
Brow n was off his game in the ear
ly part of the season on account of
his troubles as captain of a brand
new and mighty green and unprom
ising team; but when it came around
to the big gamtfs “Nuck” was right
there again with the 24-carat stuff.
The greater the responsibility the
brighter Brown scintillated, both on
offense and defense. “Nuck” has
enough weight, plenty of speed, made
A11-Routhern last year, has had four
years’ varsity experience, has the grit
of a bulldog and is an altogether
high-class and dependable end.
Robinson, of Auburn, is just as
good .It the Other end of the "W«-
are-seven” bunch. All that I have
said about Brown goes for Robinson
as well; and in addition to this the
latter has such good weight that It
makes it possible for him to stand
and hold his own against Interfer
ence if he sees fit to do so instead
of going under it This renders it
possible for him to use Judgment,
and makes It difficult for the inter
ference of the other team to figure
out \ hat he Is going to do and just
whirl, will be the best way to go at
him These are two mighty hard
men to get around, and they will hold
their own in all-around football abil
ity in comparison with any all-
Routhern ends we have had in some
time.
• • *
Paddock at Quarterback.
THE selection of a fitting quarter-
1 back is one of the hard nuts in
the basket this year. There are any
•number of good quarters this year,
and the Job comes in trying to de
cide on the best, one. 1 am sura to
make a lot of enemies here.
When we confine ourselves to a
limited list of 111© very beat we find
that it Includes Tolley, of Sewanee.
Boensch, of Vanderbilt; L. Dupont, of
L. S. U.; Arnold, of Auburn; Patton,
of Tech, and Paddock, of Georgia.
The very best of these, J think, is
Paddock. You will not find in the
South this year a quarter, who can
run faster than he in a straightaway,
a man who can get through a smaller
hole, a man who will drive nearly so
hard, who will handle the ball any
cleaner, w’ho w’ill select his plays and
signals with any better Judgment, or
w’ho will play with any more spirit.
Tolley is a very good player, but
he has nothing like the speed and
plunge that Paddock owns. Boensch
can punt and run with him. but that
lets Boensch out. Arnold is a good
man, but does nothing like the
amount of work in a game that Pad-
dock piles up.
Dupont, of L. S. U., is a very £ood
and acceptable quarter. He is espe
cially fine with the 1 all. but he lacks
the all-round finish of Paddock
Patton is fine with the ball, but
Injuries throughout most of the sea
son rendered it impossible for him to
get in tiptop condition, and for this
reason also he lacked the practice to
develop his defense to anything like
his offensive standard; besides, his in
terference must improve before he
can make the All-S. I. A. A. He should
be w’ell in the hunt next year, with
no bad luck such as he had this
season.
Rainey, of Tennessee, is one of the
most promising quarters I ever saw,
and the Volunteers have a real find
in this man. He does all things well,
and by another year should be as
good a man as Paddock Is this year,
if not better, for he has more weight
and strength than Paddock.
1 am glad I have but one quarter !
to pick, for a second choice would I
harder to make than but one.
* • *
The Halfback Problem.
T HE best half dozen halfbacks of
the year have been Newell, of
Auburn; McArthur, of Mississippi A
& M.; Sikes, of Vanderbilt; Vande-
graaf. of Alabama; Cook, of Tech, and j
McWhorter, of Georgia.
Probably no one will remonstrate j
when I designate McWhorter as the
most reliable half of the year. He
has grown larger and stronger with
the passage of time until now he is
about as hard a man to bring dowm
as ever stepped forth on a Southern
grid. His defense has also Improved
considerably, and he is a fine man to
play back and receive punts. Not
the last of his ^accomplishments is
his splendid forward pass ability, and
If it were desired that he should do
so he would make a grand man to
receive forward passes
A very distinct advantage that
McWhorter possesses- at least in the
eyes of a coach—is his immunity to
injuries; he never gets hurt—at least
never so badly as to have to leave
the game.
I think it also due this young man
to say a word regarding the clean
ness of his game and his fine sports
manship on this the completion of
his college playing career.
He has made the All-Southern ev
ery year of the four, and in all that
time I have never heard of any act
that he committed on the field that
he or anyone would have cause to
blush for. This. I consider, is a
rather more important matter than
his playing ability. 1 trust he will
permit me through this medium to
extend to him my very sincere con
gratulations.
• • •
H ITT as easy as it is to make a
quick pick of McWhorter for
first half, just so difficult is it to make
a selection of a partner for him from
among the remaining five. Newell
has, perhaps, come in for more news
paper space this season than any of
the others, and certain it is that New
ell is a wonderful little halfback. He
is speedy, experienced, cool, -fast and
determined. But so. for that matter,
are the others.
Cook and he are about as much
alike in their game as are two peas
in a pod. -Given the same line in
front of him and I haven’t a doubt
Cook would buck or go around the
end quite as well as Newell. The
latter may be a shade the faster on
a straight run. but would he be after
half an hour’s hard backing up of
the middle of the line on defense the
way Cook is called upon to do?
I should like to say for Cook righi
here that he lioa mad© th© best cap
tain Tech has had in years, and when
we consider that in addition to his
hard work on both offense and de
fense, and the captaincy of hi$ team,
he gives all the signals as well and
does most of the forward passing for
his team, he is certainly entitled to
a mighty warm handclasp for all his
good work. Like McWhorter, it is
almost impossible to put him out,
and he has had to leave but one
game since he started playing var
sity football. All these things count
heavily in his favor.
Alabama sw’ears by Vandegraaf,
and well they may, for here is one
sure-enough player and halfback. No
man playing in the South has shown
more fighting spirit year in and year
out than this light but speedy back,
and the games he has won for Ala-.
Kama almost single-handed are many.
He will always have a place in Ala
bama’s hall of fame.
I don’t know whether T feel more
sorry for Newell or for Vandegraaft or
for Cook that I decide in the end to
turn to Sikes, of Vanderbilt, for my
other half. This man is heavier than
either of the other three. He, in my
opinion, is as fast as any of them,
and is quite as good a defensive play
er as there is in the South to-day.
This last is my real reason for de
ciding in his favor, although all must
admit that he 'knows how to get
around an end, how to make forward
passes and, most assuredly, how’ to
buck, for did not almost every critic
pick him as All-Southern fullback
last year? I myself placed him as
All-Southern quarterback, which goes
to show’ how versatile a player ha
strikes football folks as being.
* • *
I MUST take time to point out that
1 most persons, not experts, assign
too great a value to mere ability to
run with the ball. They forget all
about the other features. Now, in the
East they incline to give the prefer
ence to a man who is strong on the
defense. That is why Yale for years
and years had such a wonderful de
fense. Look at it a moment this way:
When Auburn and Vanderbilt came
together, Newell’s offensive ability
failed to show simply because Sikes’
defensive ability canceled it; but
Sikes’ usefulness did not end there,
for he was still the best interferer on
either team, he could still run very
well, ihdeed, with the ball himself,
and rie could make the forward pass
that resulted in Vanderbilt’s touch-
d own.
Give Sikes the same line in front
of him that Newell had and he would
buck, I believe, about as well as the
best of Auburn’s fullbacks. Give him
that same line and he would go around
the ends about as well as does New
ell. And then you would still have
his wonderful defensive strength and
his superb interfering ability. When
you take EVERYTHING into consid
eration, I believe Sikes is the most
finished football player south of the
Ohio.
It’s hard onfthe others, for certainly
it does seem that after putting in four
such years of fighting and toiling as
th© others have, they should be en
titled to a place somewhere; but,
somehow, I can’t see them alongside
of Sikes. In the East he would be
chosen in a minute, possibly even
ahead of McWhorter.
Logan, of Clemson, is worth very-
much more than a passing mention.
He is very fast, fine in an open field,
and runs with great spirit and power.
He reminds me over and over again
of Roy Goree.
Hester and Tenney, of Florida, are
the best men on their team. The for
mer would look good on most any
Southern team.
MacArthur, of Mississippi A. and
M., is a real good half. Last year he
played in the line, but on being tried
out in the backfield this season, he
promptly showed an ability to handle
the problems of the position such as
to encourage his coaches to keep him
there the whole season, and to excel
lent advantage.
Cochran, of Mercer, deserves a most
honorable mention,, and so does Fol-
ger, of Citadel.
Pick Auburn Fullback.
XT O one doubts that the fullback
must come from Auburn. But
which of the four great fullbacks
there is THE one for this selection?
That’s a hard question to answer,
and even the Auburnites are at a
loss to say which, on ihe whole, is
•the best of their unusually abundant
crop. As one Auburn man put it to
me: “Harris can do more work than
any of the others; Bidez goes the
hardest, but can’t last: Hart is the
most dangerous, as he is likely to
get away most any minute, while
Christopher is the best in a slightly
^broken field.”
Take your choice.
After some deliberation and some
dipping of coins I choose Tigris, for
few teams can have moy e * i\<-
good fullback, and if we are restrict
ed to one—and there is but one se
lection permitted for the first team
of the S. I.A.A.—It will have to be the
man who can do the most work and
last the longest. That policy seems
to have worked we’ with Auburn’s
team this year, for they have inva
riably started the game with Harris
in the line-up. which meant that aft
er takins- him out and resting him
they counted on the opportunitv of
being able to put him back In again
for further work before the game
was over. Afivway, anyone who saw
his work against Georgia must be
persuaded that he will do very well
Indeed, whether any of the others
will or not.
Next to Auburn's fullbacks come
Crump and Powell, of Georgia, with
Webb, of Clemson, hardly a nose be
hind. Altogether, considering Webb’s
punting and forward pass ability, I
must say that I would prefer to have
Webb on my team to either Crump
or Powell.
Johnston, of Tech, has done very
well at the position in his first year,
and will be a much better player In
another season. Long, of Alabama,
earns honorable mention.
• * *
A Good Average Team.
T"* HE team that I have selected
* would, I believe, about hold Its
own w ith the best previous All-S.I.A.
A.teams. It is not a remarkably strong
team, and on the other hand it can
not be said to be weak. It is Just
a good average team. Neither do l
think there is a man on it able to
displace any mai* whom I have here
tofore selected for a position on a
team made up of selections from all
the All-Southern teams of the past.
From the team standpoint, however,
it will do very well, for it has the
necessary weight and speed, and the
players individually know' quite as
much football as those of former
representative teams.
Onrw te 1 to B
unn&tuMl Hsr-barges..
Contain* n* p«laen* and
may be used ful^
itrea gth abeotutebe
without fear Onaran-
teed not to atricture. Prevent* contagion.
WHY NOT CURE YOURSELF?
At Druggists, or by parcel post, $1. <n
3 bottles $2 75. Particulars with •ach
bottle or mailed on request.
THE EVANS CHEMICAL COMPANY,
Cincinnati, O.
* CATARRH I
OF THE J
BLADDER]
RallcTsd In <
24 Hours J
Each Cap* s \ !
sal. b-arsthe ( M | 0Y ) \
name <
Beware of ocnmterftcts s
PAY ME FOR CURES ONLY
If you have been taking treatment for weeks and months and pay
ing out your hard earned money without being cured, don’t you
think It Is high time to accept DR. HUGHES’ GRAND OFFER?
You will certainly not be out any more money If not cured. Consul
tation and Examination are Free for the next thirty days.
If I decide that your condition will not yield readily to my treat
ment, I wlil be honest with you and tell you »o. and not accept
your money under a promise of a cure.
My treatment will positively cure or I will make you no charge
for the following diseases:
KIDNEY. BLADDER AND BLOOD
TROUBLE. PILES. VARICOSE VEINS,
FISTULA. NERVOUSNESS. WEAKNESS,
RUPTURE. ULCERS AND SKIN DISEASES.
CONSTIPATION
Eczema. Rheumatism. Catarrhal Affections, Piles and Fistula and all Nervous and Chror
DLeases of Men and Women.
New and Chronic Cases r.f Burning, Itching and Inflammation stopped in 24 hours. I am
ayalnst high and extortionate fees charged by some physicians and specialists. My fees are
reasonable and no more than you are willing 'o pay for a cure. All medicines, the purest and
best a# drugs, are supplied from niv own private laboratory. OUT-OF-TOWN MFN VlSITINC
THE CITY, consult me at once upaB arrival, and maybe you can be cured before returning
home. Mai y cases can !*• cured in one or rvo visits.
CALL OTt W’RITE -No detent.on from business. Treatment an.1 advice confidential. Hours 8
>• ni. to 6 p. m Sunday. 9 to 1 If you ccn’t call, write and give me full description of your
ase in your own wonts. A complete consultation coats you nothing and if I can help you I will.
Opposite Third National Bank.
16 1 - North Broad Street. Atlanta, Ga.
THE
L honiv. M
CALL off
a. ru. to 6
case in yo
DR
■ m»
DR. HUGHES